Cursive Kefi 11 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, logotype, packaging, invitations, headlines, elegant, romantic, fashion, signature, confident, signature feel, elegant display, personal tone, expressive caps, stylish motion, calligraphic, slanted, looped, fluid, tapered.
A flowing, slanted script with a pen-like stroke that tapers at joins and terminals, giving an ink-on-paper feel. The letterforms are built from long, sweeping curves and occasional sharp entry/exit flicks, with generous ascenders and descenders that create a lively vertical rhythm. Capitals are prominent and gestural, often spanning wide with looped bowls and extended cross-strokes, while the lowercase stays compact with notably small counters and a tight x-height. Overall spacing and connections vary slightly from glyph to glyph, reinforcing a handwritten cadence while maintaining clear, consistent slant and baseline behavior.
Well suited for brand marks, signature-style wordmarks, beauty or fashion packaging, and invitation or event collateral where personality matters more than extended reading comfort. It performs best in short lines—names, titles, pull quotes, and hero text—where the sweeping capitals and connected rhythm can be appreciated.
The font reads as stylish and personal, like a quick but practiced autograph. Its sweeping capitals and fast cursive rhythm convey confidence and a polished, upscale tone, making it feel more fashion-forward than casual. The narrow internal spaces and energetic strokes add drama and momentum, leaning toward romantic and editorial moods.
Designed to emulate a refined, fast cursive hand with an emphasis on expressive capitals and continuous motion. The intention appears to be delivering a premium, signature-driven look that feels human and stylish while remaining coherent across the full alphabet and numerals.
At smaller sizes the very compact lowercase and small counters can darken up, while larger sizes reveal the delicate tapering and expressive loops. The numerals follow the same cursive logic, with single-stroke forms that feel integrated into the handwritten system rather than separate, geometric figures.